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12201191679?profile=original19,  a peer-reviewed journal dedicated to advancing interdisciplinary study in the long nineteenth century and based at Birkbeck, University of London, has published a paper by Helen Trompeteler titled Queen Victoria and the Photographic Expression of Widowhood. 

The abstract reads: After Prince Albert’s death in 1861, Queen Victoria began an extended period of mourning that remains indelibly linked to perceptions of her identity and visual representation. This article firstly addresses the place of photography in the construction of family memory and examines how Victoria used photography to articulate her private grief and to remember Albert in the context of both her immediate and extended family. Secondly, I seek to establish the ways in which this private image is made public and is circulated by Victoria to generate popular empathy and support for political ends. Lastly, I touch on the global reach of this, and question how mourning and widowhood are implicated in international royal networks and imperial power. Thus, the article reveals the photograph of the mourning widow as more than just an illustration of Victoria and her grief; rather, it shows how the medium shapes that grief and makes it useful for monarchy and empire.

Trompeteler, H., (2022) “Queen Victoria and the Photographic Expression of Widowhood”, 19: Interdisciplinary Studies in the Long Nineteenth Century 2022(33).
doi: https://doi.org/10.16995/ntn.4717

The online journal is open access and the paper can be read here: https://19.bbk.ac.uk/article/id/4717/

Image: John Jabez Edwin Mayall, Group Portrait with a Bust of Prince Albert, April 1863, albumen print, Royal Collection Trust. © Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II 2022.

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12201184063?profile=originalThis paper will explore relationships between ecology, sexuality, and decolonisation in the portrayal of Sri Lanka (formerly Ceylon) by queer Sri Lankan photographer Lionel Wendt and queer British anti-imperialist filmmaker Basil Wright, who collaborated together in the 1930s prior to the country’s independence in 1948. In the nineteenth century British colonisers outlawed homosexuality as ‘against the order of nature’ and shifted the island’s economy to mass plantations. At a time when homosexuality was also illegal in the UK, Wendt and Wright’s collaboration reveals how imperial control over desire and the landscape were challenged by photography and film.

Dr Edwin Coomasaru is a historian of modern and contemporary art. He has been awarded Postdoctoral and Research Fellowships at Edinburgh University (2022), the Paul Mellon Centre (2020-22), and the Courtauld Institute of Art (2018-19) — where he earned his PhD in 2018 and co-convenes the Gender & Sexuality Research Group. In 2021 he also worked as a Freelance Research Assistant on an anti-racist and decolonial resource portal for the Association of Art History. He has contributed to Third Text, British Art Studies, Oxford Art Journal, The Irish Times, Irish Studies Review, The Irish Review, Photoworks Annual, Burlington Contemporary, Architectural Review, Source Magazine, and the Barbican’s Masculinities (2020) exhibition catalogue. History of Art Research Seminar Series: Sri Lanka’s Queer Tropics: Lionel Wendt’s Ceylon (1950) and Basil Wright’s Song of Ceylon (1934)

History of Art Research Seminar Series: Sri Lanka’s Queer Tropics: Lionel Wendt’s Ceylon (1950) and Basil Wright’s Song of Ceylon (1934)
University of Edinburgh / Edinburgh College of Art
30 March 2022 at 1330-1430
Online. Open to all
Details here: https://www.eca.ed.ac.uk/event/history-art-research-seminar-series-sri-lankas-queer-tropics-lionel-wendts-ceylon-1950-and
For enquiries, contact Malene Nafisi, malene.nafisi@ed.ac.uk

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This intensive two-day workshop offers a much-needed forum for cross-disciplinary dialogue and inter-disciplinary experimentation in the area of recreative practices - including photography and photographic history.

Recreative practice – the process of re-making an object - is widespread in the arts and humanities. Frequently employed in art, photography and design as a technique for retrieving haptic and tacit forms of knowledge and lost technologies, re-makes are also present throughout contemporary art and the museum world. Yet practices vary widely not only in their very appellation – recreative practice, reproduction, experimental archaeology, remaking, replication - but also in the nature and degree of their theoretical grounding. The fields of art history and curatorship, dress, and photography are particularly well-grounded theoretically and heavily engaged with questions of replication, copying and the simulacrum. In other disciplines, scholars rely on positivist materials science, yet other fields see living traditions embodied by contemporary craftspeople as critical mediators of past practice. In both cases, there are opportunities for greater criticism of the underlying assumptions these approaches entail and engagement with theoretical developments in other fields. Notwithstanding these many differences, a common set of questions and problems are readily apparent across media and disciplines. This workshop invites researchers in recreative practices to share their experiences and dialogue around these questions in a unique multi-disciplinary forum.

CALL FOR PAPERS - DEADLINE EXTENDED UNTIL MONDAY 14TH MARCH, MIDNIGHT (GMT)

CALL FOR PAPERS for Workshop on Recreative Practices in the Art and Humanities (15-16 June 2022)

Co-hosted by the School of Fashion, Textiles and the Photographic History Research Center, De Montfort University, Leicester (UK)

The Call for Papers is available here: https://sites.google.com/my.westminster.ac.uk/amateurdarkroompractices/research-notes-events

Deadline for proposals: Monday 28 February 2022 17.00 (GMT).

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12201183099?profile=originalThis year's McKenzie Lecture will explore the intersection between book history and the history of photography, and will look at the possibilities of such a combined view of the photographic book from 1843 to now.

Richard Ovenden, Bodley's Librarian, has published widely on the history of collecting and the history of photography since 2014. He is the author of Burning the Books: A History of Knowledge under Attack (2020) and of John Thomson (1837–1921): Photographer (1997), a major study of the Scottish photographer.

Photography and the Book
Richard Ovenden OBE
17 February 2022 at 1700-1800 (GMT)
Lecture Theatre 2, English Faculty, St Cross Building, Oxford
Live and streamed live, free
Register: https://visit.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/event/feb22/photography-and-the-book

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12201179465?profile=originalAs part of the City of Culture programme, Photo Miners are presenting Richard Sadler's photography of the immediate years after the Second World War in Coventry. In this period, Coventry not only recovered from the horrors of the multiple bombings that devastated the city but also renewed its character through hard work and forgiveness. Coventry became a city of the future, a welcome home to displaced and migrant people and one that pioneered new ways of living through its architecture and planning and innovative industry.

Richard lived through this period and, in a time of scarce photographic resources, committed to documenting Coventry's story. Thanks to his work, we have high-quality visual evidence of 1950s Coventry. At the Old Grammar School, Hales Street, Coventry, Photo Miners are working with communities to curate three sequential exhibitions that try to do justice to both Richard and that time.

The exhibitions are:

12201179865?profile=originalPioneering People: Sadler and the City / 8 February - mid-March 2022

In this first exhibition, we present the people of post-war Coventry: the children, teenagers and young adults that inherited a damaged city and set the common ground to transform Coventry into a city of peace and reconciliation.

You'll see the Umbrella Club, opened by the Goons in 1955 as well as Foleshill Jazz Club from earlier in the decade. We'll show you dancing in the streets too, as well as how to hang out at the precinct in 1950s Coventry.

We also present some photography of Coventry at the time, the damage and the recovery, including a series on the famous Godiva Cafe and Broadgate - to illustrate Coventry's belief then that it is a city of the future, a belief we believe applies today.

12201180701?profile=originalPioneering Industry: Sadler and Courtaulds / End March - end April 2022

Courtaulds was an internationally-renowned man-made fibre manufacturer, producing products used by the military as well as by civilians. It was so strategically important that, as a condition of the USA joining the Second World War, the Courtaulds Company had to give up its manufacturing base and product rights in America.

Courtaulds had facilities across the UK but Coventry was its beating heart - its research centre that developed the products that made its name.

In this second exhibition, we use Sadler's 1951-54 photography to showcase the scientists, workers and processes that made the company such a huge success.

In particular, we focus on how Courtaulds in Coventry employed more women than men, and in particular Vera Furness, who led the research team which eventually created another world-changing product - carbon fibre.

Coventry remains an innovative city and elements of the Courtaulds Company, and their specialisations, have been inherited and built upon, and so we also feature a few examples about specialist companies today.

12201181099?profile=originalPioneering Arts: Sadler and the Cathedral / May - mid-June 2022

The new Cathedral appeared in Coventry not just as an extraordinarily high-quality building designed and built to last for a thousand years but as one that was home to new art. In a time when so much of the past was lost, and so the clamour to return to known ways was strong, the committee that oversaw the new cathedral was steadfast in its commitment to new art. Today we know they made the correct decision and are grateful for it.

This third exhibition, held to coincide with the 60th anniversary of the consecration of the cathedral, celebrates the time when the cathedral was new. We present unseen images of the Sutherland tapestry being offloaded and moved to the cathedral, of it being hung before the internal space was complete. We see the Ramsey-Hoskins nativity scene, now partially lost, making its first appearance. We also present previously unseen images of early mystery plays performed in the ruins. As with the City of Culture today, we're seeing in this exhibition an investment in emerging and new artists whose ways of seeing provide fresh but unfamiliar perspectives. Trust in art and you will be rewarded for years to come. 

12201182463?profile=originalAbout Richard Sadler 

Dr Richard Sadler was the official photographer at Coventry Cathedral, Belgrade Theatre, RSC and Courtaulds for many years. He also undertook arts projects, exhibiting locally, nationally and internationally, finding fame in particular with his portrait of Arthur Fellig, known as WeeGee, the American crime photographer.

Richard exhibited regularly, both locally, nationally and internationally. His website, www.richardsadler.co.uk, has more details on his many accolades and successes.

In 1968 he joined what is now Derby University as a member of the arts faculty and remained there until his retirement in the 1990s. Richard sadly died in 2020 aged 93.

Pioneering Coventry: the post-war photography of Richard Sadler
Old Grammar School, Hales Street, Coventry, between 8 February-30 May 2022
https://photomining.org/

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12201182666?profile=originalThe National Portrait Gallery has announced a major partnership with the global leader in family history, Ancestry. Over 125,000 digitised portraits from the Gallery’s extensive Collection will be made available to Ancestry users, and to celebrate, the National Portrait Gallery is working with Ancestry to launch The Nation’s Family Album – a search for undiscovered portraits of everyday British people collated into a representative online album. The initiative invites people of different ages, backgrounds and cultures in the UK to delve through suitcases in attics, scour photos on walls or flick through albums on bookshelves and submit their favourite family images.  

Entrants will be in with the chance of having their own family photographs and stories included in an online exhibition, as well as a display at the iconic National Portrait Gallery in London when it reopens in 2023, following the completion of its Inspiring People redevelopment project. 

The Nation’s Family Album is set to be an important record of our collective history, as it will highlight, celebrate and capture the rich and diverse family stories across Britain, making it easier for future generations to find out more about their family history.  

Entries open today and submissions must be uploaded digitally by Thursday 30 June 2022. Any person in the UK may submit a maximum of three images that relate to the following themes: Belonging, Legacy, Connection and Identity.  

Later this year, a panel of experts – including the National Portrait Gallery’s Chief Curator, Dr Alison Smith, and family history expert Simon Pearce from Ancestry – will shortlist a selection of portraits that best encapsulate the themes of The Nation’s Family Album

The UK, Portraits and Photographs, 1547- 2018 collection, launching on Ancestry today, captures British history and culture in a variety of mediums, including paintings, photographs, sculptures, drawings, and prints. The National Portrait Gallery showcases the work of many acclaimed artists and photographers, but portraits in the Collection are selected primarily for their subject matter and the sitter’s importance to British culture and history. As well as many iconic portraits of famous figures, the collection includes images of individuals from all walks of life, including:

For more information about how to submit your family photographs, entry Terms & Conditions and to explore the collection, visit www.ancestry.co.uk/FamilyAlbum. To buy copies of the portraits from the National Portrait Gallery, please visit www.npg.org.uk/shop/npgprints.

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Publication: Photography in the Great War

12201178862?profile=originalA new book by Jason Bate has just been published by Bloomsbury Academic. Photography in the Great War asks what is it to study historically positioned vulnerabilities in regard to patients in emerging medical photograph collections? What is the impact of the violent nature of institutional archives and imperial modes of ordering on marginalised and suppressed communities? Who exactly is being protected by the ethical protocols and conventions here? Is it the institution, the author, the reader, the deceased historical figure or distant relatives? At what point does or should the subject’s confidentiality take effect? When does a person, their name, their image have a right to privacy and anonymity and when not, and who gets to decide? 

In Photography in the Great War, Jason Bate draws on a rich set of materials to examine postwar experiences of ex-servicemen who were facially-disfigured during the First World War. Weaving together medical, institutional, amateur and family photographic practices and processes under a social history framework, he underscores overlooked aspects of these men’s continued hardships after returning home from the front. In particular, a focus is on the private sphere of the family and the complicated world of employment that disfigured veterans navigated on their return. 

Little attention has hitherto been paid to the aftercare of disfigured veterans once discharged from the army, or the long-term impact on individuals, and the sense of burden felt by families and local communities. In addressing this neglected area, the chapters here illuminate different practices of photography by doctors, nurses, press agencies, and families across the generations to challenge our perceptions of the personal traumas of soldiers and civilians.

Photography in the Great War. The Ethics of Emerging Medical Collections from the Great War
Jason Bate

Bloomsbury Publishing, 2022
See more here: https://www.bloomsbury.com/uk/photography-in-the-great-war-9781350122062/

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12201188078?profile=originalPhotohistories has published an extensive and insightful interview with Grace Robertson & Thurston Hopkins by Graham Harrison. It dates to from 19 January 2011....Sitting with their cats in the lounge of their cottage at Seaford on the Sussex coast, Grace and Thurston are discussing the demise of Picture Post, as Graham Harrison listened. The couple regret not taking their negatives from the ‘Post’ darkroom, nearly all of which went into the Hulton Picture Library....

Read the full piece here: https://photohistories.org/histories/grace-and-thurston-seaford-19-january-2011

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12201185275?profile=originalThe Library of Congress will create a new National Stereoscopic Photography Research Collection, fellowship and public program in collaboration with the National Stereoscopic Association to support one of the nation’s largest collections of this photography format, the two organizations announced today.

Stereographs are paired photographs that provide an illusion of three-dimensionality when placed in a special viewer called a stereoscope. They were among the first photographic entertainment formats that became popular from the Civil War to the early decades of the 20th century when new technologies like motion pictures captured the public’s attention. Recent technical innovations like virtual reality have brought renewed focus to both the history and continued use of the stereo format.

The Library’s Prints and Photographs Division holds one of the foremost collections of stereographs, dating from early daguerreotypes in the 1850s to published sets from the 1930s. More than 40,000 have been digitized and are available online at https://www.loc.gov/pictures/collection/stereo/.

A monetary donation from the association has established the National Stereoscopic Photography Research Fellowship and annual lecture at the Library of Congress. The award will ensure support for research on stereoscopy and the history of photography within the Prints & Photographs Division holdings and the unparalleled photographic history collections at the Library of Congress — including over 15 million photographs, rare publications, manuscript materials and historic newspapers — and build awareness of the Library of Congress as a premier research center for photographs in this format. 

“The Prints & Photographs Division is excited by the opportunity to host its first research fellows dedicated to the study of photography,” said Helena Zinkham, chief of the Library’s Prints and Photographs Division. “The gift by the National Stereoscopic Association will give new scholarly focus to this pivotal, but often overlooked, format.”

“The National Stereoscopic Association sees this as an ideal collaboration, addressing the missions of both organizations. We are delighted to collaborate with the Library of Congress to increase awareness of the importance of stereoscopic photography and to support the scholarship and visibility of photographs as historic resources,” said John Bueche, president, National Stereoscopic Association.

The Library of Congress National Stereoscopic Association Fellowship committee will award up to two fellowships annually (with award amounts from $3,000 to $6,000) to be used to cover travel to and from Washington, D.C., accommodations, and other research expenses to assist fellows in their scholarly research and writing projects on stereoscopic photography, or more broadly within the field of photographic history to the extent that research is connected in some manner to the Library’s holdings on the format.

Graduate students, postdoctoral researchers, independent scholars, creators and other researchers with a need for research support are encouraged to apply.

Additional information about applying for the fellowship is available at this link: https://www.loc.gov/rr/print/national_stereoscopic.html. 

The application deadline is April 15, 2022, and notification of selection will occur at the National Stereoscopic Association’s annual convention in August 2022. The Fellowship research must be completed in 2023.

Additionally, the National Stereoscopic Association is donating a complete collection of the organization’s StereoWorld magazine, related research files, organizational records, historic publications, checklists, and member materials to build the collection and assist in the research and interpretation of stereo photography. The collection will provide an archival home and historic record of the association and its contributions to the field at the national library. 

The Library of Congress is the world’s largest library, offering access to the creative record of the United States — and extensive materials from around the world — both on-site and online. It is the main research arm of the U.S. Congress and the home of the U.S. Copyright Office. Explore collections, reference services and other programs and plan a visit at loc.gov, access the official site for U.S. federal legislative information at congress.govand register creative works of authorship at copyright.gov.

# # #

Media Contact: Brett Zongker, bzongker@loc.gov

Public Contact: Micah Messenheimer, stereofellow@loc.gov

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12201189058?profile=originalThe discovery of the ‘X-ray’ had profoundly significant effects upon modern culture; it pushed the boundaries of science and medicine, operated as spectacle for public entertainment, nourished beliefs in the paranormal and provided a subject through which printed media could raise emerging modern social and ethical issues. The fascination with X-rays has been described as a ‘mania [that] swept the West’. At least forty-nine books and 1,044 scientific essays on the subject appeared in the first year of its discovery. Whilst X-radiation generated incredible cultural and scientific fascination, it was also enveloped into other media, from writing and literature to film and painting. This talk will consider some examples of the cultural and artistic forms that this new discovery took and what they had to say about it.

Dr Tom Slevin is a Senior Lecturer at Solent University. Tom has published numerous works around the themes of modern visual culture, photography, critical theory, the European artistic avant-garde, the philosophy of technology and bodily representation.

 Art, Science & Technology: The Discovery of X-Rays and its Culture
Dr Tom Slevin
Wednesday, 16 February, 2022 Start time: 7:00pm
from £4.50 to support the work of the Southampton City Art Gallery
Register here: https://www.wegottickets.com/event/532395#

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12201190473?profile=originalReposting this from a few years ago, I have an 1870s albumen photo by Mansell, and my colleague Thomas Harris has an 1846 Daguerreotype by Mayall of the same image, clearly an early rubbing of the Rosetta Stone with applied graphics. After years of searching we have yet to find any information about it. My albumen has pencil notations on the reverse that suggest someone was trying to decipher a particular hieroglyphic line.

Can someone here suggest a person I can contact at the British Museum about this?  

Many Thanks, David12201190701?profile=original12201191493?profile=original

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12201187284?profile=originalThe Hyman Collection has announced a new website with additional features and expanded scope to reflect the breadth of the collection. It replaces the original site launched in 2015.  The Hyman Collection is the private collection of Claire and James Hyman. It started in 1996 and consists of over 3000 works from across the world, in all media. 

The current exhibition is: Visual Politics: Recent acquisitions by the Hyman Collection which runs until 1 April 2022. See:  http://hymancollection.org/exhibitions/13/

The Hyman Foundation exists to promote and advance education in and appreciation of the arts, in particular the art of photography, in particular but not exclusively by:
a) The establishment and maintenance of an archive, collection and library of historical and contemporary photography; and
b) Providing support to contemporary artists working in photography through the awarding of grants and commissions in particular but not exclusively to young artists and to women working with photography.

Scope of Activities
The Hyman Foundation aims to promote and support photography in Britain in all its diversity.

The charity aims to facilitate the work of contemporary artists, fund research and scholarship, and address issues of legacy and the preservation of archives.
To serve these objectives, we plan to do the following:

  1. Create a series of funded grants and projects. These include:
    • Grants with a focus on young artists and women working in photography
    • Mentoring for younger and mid-career artists to advise on their careers, consider legacy issues, and encourage best practice for archiving their work.
    • Working with older artists to help preserve, archive and digitize photographic work for future heritage.
    • Research grants for art historical scholarship
  2. Establish and maintain an archive, collection and library of historical and contemporary photographs.
  3. Form partnerships with other arts organizations, including Universities, to provide a hub for British photography past, present and future.

Visit the website here: https://hymancollection.org/

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12201186679?profile=originalFour Corners, in collaboration with Oxford House, and celebrating their exhibition Youth of Yesterday, is sitting down with local photographer Raju Vaidyanathan, who has been documenting London's East End as a Brick Lane and Tower Hamlets resident, since the 1980s.

As a teenager in 1983, Raju acquired an old second-hand camera and started taking photos. Without enough money to print them, it wasn't until the mid-2010s that he started to develop what had by then become over forty thousand negatives of people and personalities in the neighbourhood.

In this talk, Raju will discuss his approach to taking photographs, and how he captured his local area of Brick Lane.

Raju Vaidyanathan in Conversation
Thursday, 3 February 2022 at 1845 (GMT)
Live event, Oxford House, Derbyshire Street, London, E2 6HG

Free, donations welcome
Book here: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/photography-talk-raju-vaidyanathan-in-conversation-tickets-250162261057?mc_cid=405b48e1c6&mc_eid=3b48922efe

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12201183883?profile=originalAny new book from Elizabeth Edwards is significant. Her most recent book has just been published. Photographs and the Practice of History asks what is it to practice history in an age in which photographs exist? What is the impact of photographs on the core historiographical practices which define the discipline and shape its enquiry and methods? In Photographs and the Practice of History, Elizabeth Edwards proposes a new approach to historical thinking which explores these questions and redefines the practices at the heart of this discipline.

Structured around key concepts in historical methodology which are recognisable to all undergraduates, the book shows that from the mid-19th century onward, photographs have influenced historical enquiry. Exposure to these mass-distributed cultural artefacts is enough to change our historical frameworks even when research is textually-based.

Conceptualised as a series of 'sensibilities' rather than a methodology as such, it is intended as a companion to 'how to' approaches to visual research and visual sources. Photographs and the Practice of History not only builds on existing literature by leading scholars: it also offers a highly original approach to historiographical thinking that gives readers a foundation on which to build their own historical practices.

Photographs and the Practice of History: A Short Primer
Elizabeth Edwards
Bloomsbury Academic, 2022
https://www.bloomsbury.com/uk/photographs-and-the-practice-of-history-9781350120655/


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12201183299?profile=originalAs part of its on-going series of talks looking at collections of photography the RPS Historical Group is  hosting Anne Gleave, Curator of Photographic Collections, Archives Centre, Maritime Museum, National Museums Liverpool, who will give an introduction to the Stewart Bale Ltd photographic collection held at National Museums Liverpool. 

The collection consists of most of the surviving Bale negatives, around 200,000, principally large format glass and film, along with approximately 4,000 prints and original documentation i.e. order books or negative registers and client registers.  The date span and diverse range of Bale’s commissions has left a unique visual legacy of Liverpool’s built environment and industrial, shipping and commercial history during a major period of social change and development.  Although principally from the North West, commissions extended nationally.  The range of subject matter is particularly well represented in shipping; docks and cargo handling; engineering; architecture; industry; commerce; transport and World War II bomb damage in and around Liverpool.  The talk will aim to show a cross section of image content, some details of the firm’s history, the collection and the work that has been undertaken to date to preserve and catalogue it.

Presenting the... Stewart Bale Ltd Collection
8 February 2022
Free, online
Register here: https://rps.org/bale

Past talks are available https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLbpBS9KWcBfCfeWAJNybBw15Ps_L3w6gQ

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12201185485?profile=originalThe Archivist post sits within the Programming department at The Photographers' Gallery which includes the Exhibitions, Digital and Education teams. Programming staff are responsible for the planning, development, delivery, evaluation and archiving of: exhibitions, events, projects and related activities. 

The Archivist post will oversee the acquisitions, management, preservation and dissemination of the collections within Archive, alongside participating in the wider work of the organisation. The successful candidate will be a qualified professional with knowledge and experience of archiving practice within a visual arts organisation, with an interest in photography. 

Details: https://thephotographersgallery.org.uk/about-us/job-vacancies-tpg

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12201190079?profile=originalThis informal illustrated talk will explore the photographic practice of Augusta Crofton Dillon (1839 - 1928) of Mote Park House, Roscommon and Clonbrock House, Ahascragh, Galway. Crofton was a talented amateur photographer. Her work is included in one of Ireland's finest photographic collections - the Clonbrock Collection at the National Library of Ireland - and is highly sought-after by private collectors worldwide.

Orla Fitzpatrick has an extensive knowledge of historical photographic practices in Ireland. In her research into Augusta Crofton's work she has examined a wide range of previously neglected source materials. In this talk, Fitzpatrick will draw on her close examination of Crofton's diaries and personal account books. They span a thirty-year period from 1865 to 1895 and reveal new insights into Crofton's experiments with the wet plate collodion process in the 1860s through to her adoption of later technologies and hand-held instant cameras.

This talk is presented as part of In Our Own Image: Photography in Ireland 1839 to the Present - the first comprehensive historical and critical survey of photography in Ireland. The launch exhibition in this year-long programme is on display at the Printworks, Dublin Castle until February 5th.

See more and book: https://app.squarespacescheduling.com/schedule.php?owner=20183240&calendarID=6459355

Livestream: https://www.youtube.com/c/GalleryOfPhotographyDublin/featured

Photography, femininity and leisure: Augusta Crofton Dillon's photographic practice, 1865 to 1895
Dr Orla Fitzpatrick

Live and streamed
Monday, 31 January at 1.15pm
Poddle Room, Printworks, Dublin Castle, Dublin, Ireland

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12201183086?profile=originalImpressions Gallery is a charity that helps people understand the world through photography. Established in 1972, we have grown to become one of the UK’s leading centres for photography.

We are seeking to appoint a Curator to work as part of our small and dedicated team.

The Curator will be responsible for the delivery of exhibitions, commissions, and other curatorial projects in line with Impressions Gallery’s vision and mission. They will contribute ideas to the artistic programme, with opportunities to curate and lead on exhibitions that champion high-quality and risk-taking photography that is accessible to all.

See more and apply here: https://www.impressions-gallery.com/opportunity/curator/

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